ABSTRACT

What are reason and rationality? How significant are recent postmodernist and neuroscientific challenges to these longheld notions? Should we abandon a belief in reason and an adherence to rationality? Or can reason and rationality be reformulated and reframed? And what does politics have to do with how we think about reason and why we act more or less rationally?

The Politics of Rationality differs from other books with "reason" or “rationality” due to its historical, political, depth-psychological, and multidisciplinary approach to understanding reason through history. 

Charles P. Webel eloquently clarifies the links among ideas, their creators, the relevant mental processes, and the political cultures within which such important concepts as reasons and rationality take hold.  He demonstrates how reason and rationality/irrationality have become what they mean for us today and proposes a way to rethink reason and rationality in light of the withering critiques leveled against them.  In doing so, he presents a "history of reason and rationality" by examining the intellectual and political contexts of four representative theorists of reason and rationality-- Plato, Machiavelli, Kant, and Weber—and by addressing contemporary challenges posed by postmodernism, depth psychology, and neurophilosophy.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Reason within Occidental History

chapter |50 pages

From the Deed to the Word

Reason and Rationality in the Discourse of Ancient Occidental Intellectuals, Especially Plato

chapter |37 pages

From the State of Reason to Raison d'État

Machiavelli and the Historicity of All Ideals

chapter |50 pages

Kant

The Architectonic of Reason

chapter |47 pages

Max Weber

The Disenchantment of Reason with the Domination of Rationality

chapter |20 pages

Conclusion

History within Reason, or a World without Reason?